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Megan Schutt Duke Energy Fellow Department of Marine Sciences University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 16 November 2014 I am a fellow graduate of the University of Tennessee with Hannah, and am now pursuing a Master’s of Science in Marine Science at the University of North Carolina. I have worked with Hannah in and out of the University of Tennessee’s Chancellor’s Honors Program (CHP) for almost five years. I worked in the CHP office for several years, and her name and accomplishments were always visible. I was not directly involved in her academic culture, but all of us in the program were well aware of her reputation. From the blog she kept during her study in Malta to the publishing of her honors thesis senior year, it was hard to ignore her work. I first met her during a CHP-sponsored geology field camp, in which her unbridled passion for learning made the other honors students and me seem like we were just there for the scenery. I say this not to mock myself, but to depict, in truth, a student whose appetite and drive for scholarship are well beyond her years and current experiences. While Hannah’s academic prowess and gift for writing should be evident by her collection of publications, one facet that may not be so visible is her vigor for ‘change-making.’ Most students, especially those in the disheartening fields that she has chosen to define her life, easily become overwhelmed or pessimistic when thinking about the future of our society. Hannah, though she is a realist, remains ever progressive in investigating ways in which she can affect change in systems of social inequality and environmental degradation. She is able to speak and write about the nuances plaguing a particular area, to make you feel – acutely – the problems with which these areas are stricken, but nevertheless instill hope within you: that if only we could come up with the right idea, these problems would be solved. I believe that a graduate program in biogeography would light a fire under Hannah’s feet, and I guarantee you that once this happens to people like Hannah, the work they produce remains unmatched. I know

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Megan SchuttDuke Energy FellowDepartment of Marine SciencesUniversity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill16 November 2014I am a fellow graduate of the University of Tennessee with Hannah, and am now pursuing a Masters of Science in Marine Science at the University of North Carolina. I have worked with Hannah in and out of the University of Tennessees Chancellors Honors Program (CHP) for almost five years. I worked in the CHP office for several years, and her name and accomplishments were always visible. I was not directly involved in her academic culture, but all of us in the program were well aware of her reputation. From the blog she kept during her study in Malta to the publishing of her honors thesis senior year, it was hard to ignore her work. I first met her during a CHP-sponsored geology field camp, in which her unbridled passion for learning made the other honors students and me seem like we were just there for the scenery. I say this not to mock myself, but to depict, in truth, a student whose appetite and drive for scholarship are well beyond her years and current experiences. While Hannahs academic prowess and gift for writing should be evident by her collection of publications, one facet that may not be so visible is her vigor for change-making. Most students, especially those in the disheartening fields that she has chosen to define her life, easily become overwhelmed or pessimistic when thinking about the future of our society. Hannah, though she is a realist, remains ever progressive in investigating ways in which she can affect change in systems of social inequality and environmental degradation. She is able to speak and write about the nuances plaguing a particular area, to make you feel acutely the problems with which these areas are stricken, but nevertheless instill hope within you: that if only we could come up with the right idea, these problems would be solved.I believe that a graduate program in biogeography would light a fire under Hannahs feet, and I guarantee you that once this happens to people like Hannah, the work they produce remains unmatched. I know she would be indelibly interested in bringing her skills in studying people over to the spatial and geographical realm. The opportunity to study ecology and human impacts with professionals who truly care would offer Hannah the chance to work with the type of person she has always been to those of us in the Honors Program a vivacious researcher bent on world-changing who serves as the goal we all hope to reach one day.

Please do not hesitate to contact me if you have any further questions.Megan [email protected]